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Kitten’s Death Draws Attention To Animals As Cargo

January 26, 2011 at 6:30 pm

This undated photo courtesy of Linda Preece and Heather Lombardi shows Lombardi's kitten named Snickers. Heather Lombardi paid nearly $300 to fly Snickers, an 11-week-old, 3-pound hairless kitten, from Utah to Connecticut in climate-controlled air cargo. By the time owner and pet were reunited, Snickers was icy cold and couldn't move her head or paws, Lombardi said. The kitten died a short time later. (Credit: Linda Preece and Heather Lombardi/AP Photo)(Credit: Linda Preece and Heather Lombardi/AP Photo)

By the time kitten and owner united, Snickers was icy cold and couldn’t move her head or paws, Lombardi said. The kitten died a short time later.

“I feel so guilty. We sat there for nearly an hour. If I’d known, I would have thrown a fit,” said Lombardi, who was flying Snickers home from a breeder. “We just sat there. We had no idea she was dying.”

The Department of Transportation tracks animal deaths in transit, but no one keeps tabs on how many die of cold or heat in cargo holds or elsewhere, said veterinarian Louise Murray, vice president of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals’ Bergh Memorial Animal Hospital in New York City.

Heat deaths are more common, Murray said, but because winter weather has been extreme this year, Murray is sure death rates have climbed.

Lombardi’s $289.94 cargo ticket on Delta Air Lines included $70 to make sure Snickers was taken off the plane quickly. But Lombardi said it took 50 minutes to get the cat off the plane.

Delta Flight 738 to Hartford arrived at 8:40 p.m., when the National Weather Service said it was 10 degrees.

Delta spokeswoman Susan C. Elliott said she couldn’t talk about specifics because the cat’s death was under investigation.

“Regardless of the cause, we understand the impact the loss of an animal can have on a pet owner. We are turning our attention now to offering our condolences and discussing how we can provide some kind of restitution to support her (Lombardi) during this time,” Elliott said.

Lombardi and her two daughters wrapped Snickers in a coat and ran for the car, where they turned on the heater and headed for the vet. On the trip, the cat let out what Lombardi described as a “bloodcurdling cry” and went limp.

Veterinarian Caroline Flower said Snickers was dead on arrival at the Connecticut Veterinary Clinic in West Hartford, a 24-hour emergency center where she was on duty Saturday night.

The cat was cold and bleeding from the mouth and nose, Flower said, all symptoms of extreme hypothermia. Without a necropsy, she can’t be 100 percent certain the cat froze to death, but it looked that way, said the vet.

More than 2 million pets and other live animals are transported by air every year in the United States, according to the Department of Transportation.

Between November of 2009 and October of 2010, 33 animals died, 11 were injured and five were lost while being transported, according to the DOT. Of those, Delta reported 12 deaths, four injuries and one loss. American Airlines reported eight animal deaths, while Continental Airlines and United Airlines each reported four and Alaska Airlines three. Hawaiian Airlines and American Eagle had one each.

“We carry hundreds of thousands of animals a year,” Elliott said. “Among the different animals we carry, we have zoological institutions that entrust us with some rare species and we transport all sorts of unique animals. It is unusual to have this happen.”

The U.S. Department of Agriculture, which oversees animals that are transported by air cargo, will also investigate Snickers’ death, said spokesman Dave Sacks.

“We ensure the humane treatment and transport of animals. Our sole focus is to ensure airline personnel humanely cared for those animals while they had them,” Sacks said. “We look into each and every death and hold the airlines accountable.”

Penalties for violations of the Animal Welfare Act range from a letter of warning to revocation of an airline’s license to transport animals, but Sacks said he didn’t know of any airline operating with a revoked animal transport license.
Cargo temperature has been a particular problem in summer for “short-faced” dogs, dozens of whom died in transit between May of 2005 and May of 2010, said DOT spokesman Bill Mosley.

The department issued a release recommending that owners talk to their vets before shipping short-faced dogs in air cargo.

According to the USDA, Delta is one of several carriers that refuse to accept pets as checked bags during the summer when temperatures go over 85 degrees because the heat may threaten the lives of the animals.

Heat deaths can happen very quickly, while hypothermia takes much more prolonged exposure to the cold, Murray said. But she said pets being shipped in cold weather are at risk, not only on the plane, but on the runway. Even if cargo holds are climate controlled, runways are not.

The impact of cold on pets depends on body type, health, coat, where the breed was developed and for what purpose, she said. “For example, a greyhound will get colder faster than a cocker spaniel.”

On most airlines, passengers can bring a small pet on board instead of putting the animal in cargo.

For the money she paid to put Snickers in cargo, Lombardi said she could have flown to Utah to pick her up: “I could have bought a seat on the plane and carried her on my lap.”

She hopes what happened to Snickers will help another pet owner.

“People need to know there are risks when flying your animals. If maybe one other animal doesn’t die because someone knows, I’ll know she didn’t die for nothing,” Lombardi said.

I can understand wanting a certain breed of cat or dog but honestly the shelters and streets are full of every kind of animal desperately needing homes, that $300 could have gone a long way in a shelter and she could have had a lovely cat as well.